Wenande Brianna, Een Emily, Petok Jessica R
Department of Psychology, Saint Olaf College, Northfield, MN, United States of America.
Department of Psychology, Saint Olaf College, Northfield, MN, United States of America.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2019 Aug;199:102903. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2019.102903. Epub 2019 Aug 27.
Dyslexia is often characterized by disordered word recognition and spelling, though dysfunction on various non-linguistic tasks suggests a more pervasive deficit may underlie reading and spelling abilities. The serial-order learning impairment in dyslexia (SOLID) hypothesis proposes that sequence learning impairments fundamentally disrupt cognitive abilities, including linguistic processes, among individuals with dyslexia; yet only some studies report sequence learning deficits in people with dyslexia relative to controls. Evidence may be mixed because traditional sequence learning tasks often require strong motor demands, working memory processes and/or executive functions, wherein people with dyslexia can show impairments. Thus, observed sequence learning deficits in dyslexia may only appear to the extent that comorbid motor-based processes, memory capacity, or executive processes are involved. The present study measured sequence learning in college-aged students with and without dyslexia using a single task that evaluates sequencing and non-sequencing components but without strong motor, executive, or memory demands. During sequencing, each additional link in a sequence of stimuli leading to a reward is trained step-by-step, until a complete sequence is acquired. People with dyslexia made significantly more sequencing errors than controls, despite equivalent performance on non-sequencing components. Mediation analyses further revealed that sequence learning accounted for a large portion of the variance between dyslexia status and linguistic abilities, particularly pseudo-word reading. These findings extend the SOLID hypothesis by showing difficulties in the ability to acquire sequences that may play an underlying role in literacy acquisition.
阅读障碍通常表现为单词识别和拼写紊乱,不过在各种非语言任务中出现的功能障碍表明,阅读和拼写能力可能存在更广泛的缺陷。阅读障碍中的序列顺序学习障碍(SOLID)假说提出,序列学习障碍从根本上扰乱了阅读障碍个体的认知能力,包括语言加工过程;然而,只有一些研究报告称,与对照组相比,阅读障碍患者存在序列学习缺陷。证据可能参差不齐,因为传统的序列学习任务通常需要较强的运动需求、工作记忆过程和/或执行功能,而阅读障碍患者在这些方面可能存在损伤。因此,阅读障碍中观察到的序列学习缺陷可能仅在涉及共病的基于运动的过程、记忆能力或执行过程时才会出现。本研究使用一项单一任务,评估了有阅读障碍和无阅读障碍的大学生的序列学习情况,该任务评估序列和非序列成分,但对运动、执行或记忆的要求不高。在序列学习过程中,导致奖励的一系列刺激中的每一个额外环节都会逐步进行训练,直到获得完整的序列。尽管阅读障碍患者在非序列成分上表现相当,但他们在序列学习中出现的错误明显多于对照组。中介分析进一步表明,序列学习在阅读障碍状态和语言能力(尤其是假词阅读)之间的差异中占了很大一部分。这些发现扩展了SOLID假说,表明获取序列的能力存在困难,这可能在读写能力的获得中起着潜在作用。